In fourth place were the Otis-built John Hancock Center elevators; 33 km/h

In fifth were Mitsubishi-made elevators at the Jin Mao Tower in Shanghai, China, 32.8 km/h.

The CN Tower says its elevators travel up to 22 km/h, taking passengers to the top in 58 seconds. Although it doesn’t own a speed record, the CN Tower does have one world elevator record: It has the world’s highest elevators with glass floor panels.

“This is the first time we’ve ranked elevators speeds,” Matthew Keutenius, senior data analyst for Emporis, told the Toronto Star. “It’s one of the fascinating aspects of high rises.”

Customer satisfaction was not part of the research, but Keutenius said it’s an inescapable fact that people will want faster elevators to cut down on travel to higher floors as buildings get taller.